Glenn Loury
The Glenn Show
Greg Thomas – A Future for Black Tradition
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Greg Thomas – A Future for Black Tradition

Normally I would post one of my bi-weekly conversations with John McWhorter today, but John and I had too many scheduling conflicts to find time to talk this week (he’ll return in two weeks). So in his stead, I’m talking with Greg Thomas, co-founder of the Jazz Leadership Project and senior fellow at the Institute for Cultural Evolution.

We begin by discussing Greg’s work with the Jazz Leadership Project, which uses the principles of jazz to train leaders within businesses and organizations. He’s got some big-league clients, so I was interested to know how Greg implements ideas and strategies from an originally African American art form within a corporate environment. Greg was a friend of the great critic, poet, and novelist Stanley Crouch, and I ask him about how they came to know each other. This leads us to discuss the intellectual lineage that runs from Ralph Ellison and Albert Murray through Crouch. These thinkers were deeply rooted in black art, culture, and politics, but they were also, to varying degrees, skeptical of race as a foundational concept. Is there anyone now continuing this tradition? Greg talks about his own efforts in that direction, but he also notes that the modern Enlightenment tradition, which sought a scientific foundation for knowledge and institutions, has been at least partially displaced by postmodern thought, which seeks to critique the Enlightenment. Greg argues that such a critique is fine, so long as we don’t abandon modernity’s gains. He then introduces some ideas from integral theory and from the philosopher Anthony Appiah that he believes can help reconcile the need both to preserve culturally specific traditions and to claim membership in a broader cosmopolitan community. And finally, Greg tells me about some of his daughter’s impressive accomplishments, including building the We Read Too app.

I really enjoyed having Greg on as a guest, and I hope to have him back on for an episode with both John and I soon.


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0:00 Greg’s work with the Jazz Leadership Project

12:35 How does a “black” art form operate within a corporate environment?

17:27 What’s left of the legacy of Ralph Ellison, Albert Murray, and Stanley Crouch?

25:04 Black culture after the postmodern turn

32:45 Greg’s work with the Institute for Cultural Evolution

36:40 Greg’s critique of Black Lives Matter

40:48 Rooted cosmopolitanism and the “Faustian bargain” of whiteness

50:46 Greg’s very accomplished daughter


Links and Readings

The Jazz Leadership Project

The Institute for Cultural Evolution

Greg’s Substack post, “Why Race-Based Framings of Social Issues Hurt Us All”

Stanley Crouch’s Notes of a Hanging Judge: Essays and Reviews, 1979-1989 

Video from Combating Racism and Antisemitism Together

Steve McIntosh’s Developmental Politics: How America Can Grow Into a Better Version of Itself

Charles Love’s Race Crazy: BLM, 1619, and the Progressive Racism Movement

Kwame Anthony Appiah’s, Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers

Danielle Allen 

Resmaa Menakem, My Grandmother's Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies

Kaya Thomas Wilson’s We Read Too app 


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Glenn Loury
The Glenn Show
Race, inequality, and economics in the US and throughout the world from Glenn Loury, Professor of Economics at Brown University and Paulson Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute